Secrets of the No-Sew Rag Rug

Making a braided rag rug usually involve sewing. The no-sew woven version is something of a unicorn!
The weaving below follows the same principle that we all used in making those funny cotton loop potholders–under, over, under, over. If you remember that, you’ve got a head start!

No-Sew Homemade Rag Rug

Preparing Your Fabric

Gather two colors of fabric scraps. I used t-shirts for this rug, however, I don’t recommend it; the rug didn’t want to lay flat. The braiding stretched the material and it really wanted to spring back.

Grab your favorite fabric shears, cut strips 1-3 inches wide, and remove any seams. Try to get them at least a few feet long. The shorter the strip, the more often you have to join new strips. If you want to have even less joining, you can use the cutting technique in our make fabric yarn post. (.)

Getting Started
Hold two strips together and LOOSELY knot them back on themselves. You’ll be trying to shove fabric through this later, so if it’s too tight, you’ll get aggravated. Also, notice that the pieces in the picture are UNEVEN. At the end of every strand, you’ll have to join a new one. Rag rugs look better if that’s staggered. If you want stripes like mine, arrange your colors to alternate A,B,A,B when you lay them flat.

Begin Braiding
Take the one on the far right side and go “under, over, under, over”(UOUO) heading to the left.

Continue taking each right-hand strand and going “under, over, under” (UOU). Notice that it’s not a TIGHT braid. Just snug enough to lay flat and hold its shape.

When you get a braid about 1/2 the length of the rag rug you want, stop.

Making a Turn

After I went UOU with that gray strip, I turned the whole braid to point away from me. Then I pull that gray guy around and tucked him in the edge of the original braid.

Until you get all of the strips turned, the “right” hand strip will be at the top. Pick the top guy (blue, here), weave UOUO. Pull that last tucked friend of his (gray, here) and include him in the current UOU.* Then tuck him in the main braid.

Depending on your material, your rug may not want to lie flat if you turn too quickly. You may not get to tuck EVERY strand into the original braid. Sometimes you might have to skip tucking a couple so you can turn the corner smoothly. In that case, just stop at the * in the paragraph above and lay him down next to the main braid.

Once you’ve make the turn, work your way back down to the starting knot following the exact same pattern as you used to make the original braid, tucking the end through each time. (If you want the stripes, tuck it in its OWN color.)

Adding More Strips

Once you get back down to the original knot, and work your way around the curve, it’s time to add a strip! To maintain the stripes, I joined one of each color together and stuck it through the starting knot in a way that kept the pattern. Then, I continued braiding the same way I had been all along, but now there was it was under, over, under, over, under (UOUOU)–>TUCK!

You can’t see, but there’s SIX strips now.
Important to keep an even number the whole way.

Intermission

WHEW, this is way harder to explain than it is to do! For another explanation, in fact the only other explanation I’ve seen on the whole internet, click here.

Let’s also pause to learn how to join (slip-knot) strips to each other:

Cut a hole in the ends of both strips you want to join. Shove the new on through the old one. Then push the tail end of the new strip through it’s own hole and tug until snug.

Back to our regularly scheduled tutorial…

Around and Back, Then Add Two More

With your SIX strips, going UOUOU–Tuck!, continue down to the far end, make the turn and come back. When you reach the original knot end, make the turn (mostly) and add two more strips, wherever you can sneak it in.

Continue UOUOUOU–Tuck!

Every time you work yourself back to the beginning knot, add another set of strips to your rag rug until you get the width you’re looking for.

Taper Down, Now

Once the rug is the width you want it across the middle, it’s time to work yourself back down to 8 strips, then 6, 4, 2, and finally none in a way that doesn’t throw off your overall shape. When I decreased in the picture, I went under, over, under, over, under–>TUCK–>TUCK AGAIN under two more blues horizontally—>snip off the excess.

Continue until you run out of strands. Weave in that last end and snip it!

You made a no-sew braided rag rug! If you’d like to see another tutorial with the same technique, check out our Miraculous No-Sew Rag Bag.

I’m getting lost when you have to add more. i sort of kept going with the same technique under over under tuck. Can i just do that the whole time a get the same results. I’m real lost with number nine. I’m very new to this, help please?

Wow, that is so cool! I have a rag rug and I jusst love it. I’ve never seen a no-sew version! Heather from CROQZine emailed me about this and I’m so glad she did. This is fabulous. I’ll be linking, thanks so much!

Wow, this is great! The thing that really annoyed me about trying to make a traditional braided rug (got as far as doormat size and gave up…..) was the sewing together of the braids, love the fact that this avoids that altogether. Don’t know whether i’ll get to a project like this as I’m so busy coming up with projects for my blog http://www.creativejewishmom.com Do drop by for a visit!

My 84 year old Aunt makes these rugs out of dollar store platic table clothes. They work great for patio’s, mud rooms, and entrance from garage. She has told me how easy they are to make now that I have pitures to follow can’t wait to try myself. I’m off to the store for supplies!

Oh gosh, I always wanted to make a rag rug. It was great fun to begin. I couldn’t get the turn though. It would be GREAT if you started with 4 colors and then took pictures of EACH single strand as it makes the turn. For us slow pokes, if you get the chance! And then I hope I can find this site again!

WOw I’m impressed! The rug looks amazing, though I’m not sure I have the skill or patience to make my own 🙁 What I love about it is how you solve multiple problems with one project.
1. You are diverting waste from landfills by repurposing old fabric
2. You are preventing the need for yet another new, toxic, synthetic rug
3. You are filling a need for a product without using ANY new materials

Genius!

Maybe I will send you all my worn out organic fabrics and we can take over the world…

I tried your pattern about 6 months ago, because I think it looks so awesome with the swirly pattern. My question is, when the rug started getting “rug size” it wasn’t nearly as tight as the first severaly rows. Meaning, the fabric sections that loop got to be about 2 inches apart instead of around a 1/2 inch like they were the first several rows. I did keep the fabric pulled as tight through the whole rug. I was wondering if you have any advice on this, since it looks like your finished rug is weaved the same size throughout.

Thank you! These instructions were very straightforward. My first try is a little loose and lumpy, but I think I will give it another go with thinner fabric (I used scarves from the lost and found 🙂
Cheers!
liz

I love this rug! I see I’m a little late in finding it, but has anyone tried making one much larger? I’m thinking like 8’x10′ for my kids playroom, with random fun colors. Also, has anyone tried it with other fabrics? I have some old fleece blankets, or I was thinking possibly using just cotton fabrics (not knit like t-shirts).

Wondering what to do with all of dad’s old ties? Try this!
1. Start collecting a bunch of ties, somewhere from 10 to 20 depending on your size.
2. Find a rectangular piece of black cloth, the length of your waist and the height a little less than that of the ties.
3. Lay the ties face down in a horizontal row with no spaces in between.
4. Pin the black cloth to the ties, all along the top edges of them.
5. Begin sewing from the backside of your creation, the needle of your sewing machine should be running along the black cloth side of it.
6. You might want to also sew along the bottom edge of the ties, if you don’t want them to flap around.
7. To be able to close your skirt, I recommend those snappy little buttons from the cloth store. Or just safety pin it closed!

That is one impressive rug. I like that a lot. It is the hardest thing you have showed so far. Maybe I’ll start keeping old clothes for this project. It must be hard to keep the stripes exactly right. Thank you for sharing it.

The rag rug is great, and the spice cake mix/pumpkin cake is just that– a box of spice cake mix, a small can of pumpkin mixed with enough water to the correct consistancy for a cake (or half of a large can). Some canned pumpkin is more soid than others. Bake at 350 until done (about 35 minutes).

Thank you so much for this. I have been searching the internet for a tutorial for this type of rag rug and your instructions were much easier to understand than the one other postI found. I am going to get started right now 🙂

This is awesome! I’m thinking 2 for under the stove and the sink! my feet and back are always killing me from cooking (and then cleaning up!) so rugs would be great. What material would you suggest for a soft, bouncy feel? =)

This is such a great project! I found it through a Care2 article link and was inspired to try making a bedside rug for my niece using a whole pile of old clothes and fabrics. Since, second to using what I had on hand, color was paramount and I didn’t have enough of any one fabric type for a whole rug, I experimented with mixing fabrics: a Laura Ashley cotton floral dress from the eighties (remember those?!), an old pink sheet and pillowcases, a pile of old white t-shirts, a rose-colored sweatshirt and pants. I did the alternating fabrics as shown here, and when I ran out of one simply started with another, which gave me a pink-and-floral center surrounded by a pink-and-white ring and then a pink-and-rose border. I didn’t try too hard keep the stripes going, though, because I thought I’d get too frustrated and besides, looking at them made me a little dizzy! The outer rings turned out thicker and softer because they were partly jersey and sweatshirt material.

Like Liz’s first effort, mine is a little lumpy and loose in places, a little tight in others–I should have paid more attention to the linked instructions that specify to skip every other tuck when turning corners, but I decided to do it just like the one here even though mine wasn’t all jersey. I also think it’s more important than I realized to keep the fabric strands roughly equal in bulk (so thicker fabrics get thinner strips and vice versa), and also to taper the ends of the strands to a rounded point for a neater, less bulky joining knot (not as critical with the jersey, which snugs up nicely even with blunt ends). I also discovered that it’s important to work the whole rug on a flat surface–when mine got big I rashly decided to let it hang off the worktable instead of moving it to the floor, and it got all stretched out of shape. I’ve been able to tug and pull it back into a flat near-oval, though, so the looseness in places turned out to be a good thing in this case.

The roughly 3-1/2 x 5-1/2 almost-finished rug took me 4 movie-watching evenings–much quicker than I had expected. It felt like getting the rag strips ready took almost as long as the rug-making itself (and wasn’t nearly as fun).

The only place I had trouble was with instructions for decreasing: I got stymied by the fact that when you end a strand, you’re left with an uneven number and the braid doesn’t work (your braiding strand comes out underneath and then you have to tuck up instead of down, leaving you with two “over” strands in a row at the end)–so you have to decrease in twos, the same way you increase, but I couldn’t quite see how to do that properly. Would you end the second strand by tucking it in before the end of the braid row so it doesn’t throw off the over-under pattern? I’m trying different approaches and they all look a little messy.

I’m going to start a second one soon and am looking forward to making one that looks as neat and balanced as yours. Many thanks sharing this wonderful “unicorn” with us!

Wow I was writing a story about my Grandmother and the memory of the rag rugs she had on her floors came to mind. I wanted to make sure I called it the right thing so I did a search and found your site.

Now I am inspired to make my own rag rugs thank you so much for taking the time to post this on line. What a blessing!

These rugs are really beautiful! I want to make one! My grandma used to make these rag rugs but she sewed the strips together and then rolled the strips into balls till she was ready to make one. I never did see how she put them together tho…. but I love how easy it looks to braid one of these rugs. Of course it could be more complicated I guess I will find out when I attempt to make one. I hope I can. I just love these rugs!

Thanks for posting this. I am in the process of re-doing my teenage daugters room on a very limited budget. We’ve painted, new curtains and new bedding but she also wanted a rug and I can’t find what I’m looking for in the store so I thought…hmmmm, I’ll make one! I thought about the no sew blankets that are so popular now and figured there must be some kind of no sew scatter rug I can make. My search landed me empty, until I came across your posting. We are preparing for a major winter storm in the mid-west starting later today so I’ll have lots of time to work on my new project. Hope it’s as easy for me as it looked for you.

Thanks so much, my elderly friend now in nursing care made these braided and woven rugs and showed me once. I had forgotten how to make them and have been messing around with rag yarn for sometime trying to figure this out, you definitely saved my day, as you are making yours similar to hers, but I recall hers used more braids to weave with but not sure how many, 6 or 7, do you use odd or even?

anyways saving this to find later. I know you have given me back hope of learning this method. since she is no longer able to show anyone, its nice to know this instructional is here!!

This information is incredibly detailed and very helpful for any first-time rag rug maker – thank you for sharing. If however you are ever in the market for homemade rag rugs, candles, and/or soaps I would very much appreciate it if you visited my website at http://www.shirleysragrugs.com/
Thank you.

I did it! I made a small rug for practice! I wish I could show you but I’m not sure how to post a pic for you to see. You could see it on my blog at http://sunbeammom.blogspot.com/2011/07/my-first-no-sew-rag-rug.html
Thanks so much for the easy tutorial! I think some day I’ll make a really useful, bigger rug! It takes a lot of fabric though!

So, I have about a garbage bag full of tshirts, and this looks like the best way to make them into a rug. My question is though: Where do you hook on the strips when you’re adding new ones in? Just anywhere on the part that’s already braided? Or where there isn’t one already tucked through? The other tutorial didn’t explain this part very well either.
The rest of the tutorial is excellent, thanks very much for posting 🙂 I’m excited to get started.

This is too cool. My mom gave me some old purple curtains last time she was in for a visit…this was the only thing I could find on the web for how to make a rug out them. It was very helpful…when I was finished however, I still had a ton of scraps left over so I knotted them through the top of the rug and left the tails out…looks very funky and fun…like 70s shag. The rug now has a home in my daughter’s room. Thankyou for posting the steps!

Maija, I was wondering about making a rectangular rug, too. I’m going to try Becky’s suggestion and make rows woven together and tasseled at the end instead of turning (which in my experience with sew and naalbinding rugs is hard to keep flat). To the thrift store for gray and yellow tees!

I’ve tried making this rug twice and about halfway through it curls up and won’t lay flat. I need some help troubleshooting! I used the other tutorial you linked to as well. I think my issues is skipping tucks at the turns, I don’t know if I’m interpreting that part correctly. help?

Wow, this is great. I learned years ago how to do something like this but stayed with only five strips and it was sort of sloppy. I could not remember how to do it and then found here on a google search. The neat thing is you increase and then do a wind down which eliminates the problem of the one I had made. I am so excited to start one. Thank you. Great explanation, by the way.

I was so excited to make one of these rugs, that I started and am having great difficulty with the laying flat. I wish I could watch you demonstrate the skipping tucks idea. I don’t get it. I’m going to take the rug apart back to where it’s starting to bulge on the corners and hopefully I will have heard back from you by then. Thanks so much.
Joyce

Wow! I have been looking for a rug for my livingroom in colors that are pretty unusual. I found a rag rug for my kitchen that is perfect and now I can’t wait to make one for my livingroom now that I know how. Thanks for the idea and the great tutorial!

I’ve been trying to find out if there’s some other name for this particular rag-rug making technique — I’m interested in the history — but I can’t find anything in all of my research that matches this type of braiding/no-sew method. Anybody have any ideas?

I have just attempted my first no sew rag rug and would like to suggest a few hints I have found that make it an easier project: the fabric should be the same type-thickness (varied thicknesses of fabric contributes to bunching), try to make the strips the same width (helps the rug to lay flat), and pull the strips of fabric to stretch them out as it will make the strips more uniform for a flatter rug. Are there any more hints out there?

Despite the hints, the skipping, even width strips etc I STILL could not get the rug to lay flat (makes a nice big hat though) so instead of putting the knot in the middle of 2 strips (step 2) I used 3 strips and braided them instead of weaving. Other than that I followed the same pattern of tucking and turning but the best part is you don’t have to tie on new strips just keep adding to the same 3, try it out if you are having trouble like I was.

Thank you so much for the shoutout link to Chris Gustin’s page with my rug instructions on it. I have also now added them to my own website too. I love the way you used the colors into a perfect swirl! I never tried it with tshirt material, sounds like a good fabric to try when it rolls up like that.

I have used this method of making rugs when we women were stuck at hunting camp with the guys for three days. All we needed was a bag of rags and a scissors! No looms in hunting camp. HAHA It was a fun way to use up rags and create something wonderful and usable at the same time.

I can’t wait to give this a try! I have a huge black garbage bag full of t-shirts that were donated to a yard sale I threw last fall to raise money for my in-laws after my brother-in-law’s motorcycle wreck.

I just couldn’t get rid of the unsold t-shirts- I knew I’d find some use for them and it looks like I have found it.

Thanks so much for posting this! I printed out your instructions just before Thanksgiving, and shared them with my mom, who was also eager to give these a try. Well, I just finished my first rug! Unfortunately, I started weaving more tightly as I went along (once I got the hang of it a little better), which made my rug end up “bubbling” in the middle where I had been weaving it more loosely. Other than that, I think the technique of making it lie flat is similar to what you have to do when crocheting a large, flat circle. Just add in an extra every now and then at the turns. When it’s time to increase, yes, you can do that by not tucking it into the loop, but you can also do it by tucking it into the same loop that you used in the previous pass. (Wow, you’re right . . . this is far harder to describe than to do!)
I didn’t find any reason to tuck each new strip through the original knot. It’s easier, when you want to increase the number of strips, to just take an extra- long strip and pull one end through the next loop, pulling the end less than halfway through so that the two ends hanging out aren’t the same length (so that you don’t end up having two knots next to each other later on).
Anyway, I want to try making a whole rug by just continuing to use four strands on every row throughout the whole thing . . . I think that would look more like a traditional braided rug, which I like the look of. I would also like to try a square or rectangular rug. I think I’d attempt that by sticking with four strands and figuring out a way to turn back at the end of each row, boustrophedon-style. Then when I got to the size I was happy with, I’d run a row around the outside edge of the whole thing to finish it off nicely, kind of like putting the binding on the edge of a quilt.
I’ll try posting a link to a photo of my finished rug, but I’m not sure this will work. https://www.facebook.com/#!/photo.php?fbid=3163053794493&set=a.3163053434484.157186.1209783996&type=1&theater

If you are able to get to the photo, you can see that the overall look is quite different, although I did follow your instructions exactly up until I got to the row that was eight strips wide. After that, I stuck with only six or four strips per row for the rest of the rug, mostly because I wanted to make a fairly large rug and just didn’t have very much of any one fabric on hand.

Great great great idea, thanks for sharing it. I’m fixing to make a few chair pads for “new” kitchen chairs I just got. I’m wondering how many t-shirts (or rags, etc.) it took to make the project above? I’m trying to figure out the color pattern I want but not sure how to estimate the materials.

I posted a picture of the one I made on my pinterest site – I used both methods of just continuing the 4 strand braid around and the extending to 8 braidshttp://pinterest.com/theo_mageo/
go to the braid and rug ideas, mine is the one with the white center with circles of different blues

Oh my gosh! My daughter sent to this website. I’ve been trying for a least 40 years to find out how to make a braided rug with 4 strands and not sewing. I used to sit on my great-grandmothers lap and watch her make scatter rugs. She use large safety pins “tuck” the ends through. I also used cotton scraps. There was a garment factory in town and my mother would go and bring home bags of scraps for her to use. Most of the rugs were small, but she made one large one for my mother. She looked at the bags of scraps and said “This is going to be really ugly.” It was one the prettiest rugs she every made. Thanks for the directions, I’m anxious to try my hand at it, it sounds exactly like the way she made her rugs.

I really love this. Reminds me of a fingerprint. But I must be dense or something because I’m having a hard time understanding what you are doing in the directions. I would love to try this. I’ve been trying to crochet one and it just keeps forming up into a bowl 🙁

The bowl is likely happening because you aren’t adding enough new stitches each round or you’re stretching your fabric. You CAN’T stretch t-shirt fabric if you want it to remain flat. I have two posts on this site that explain the plaiting method. There’s another one on the no-sew rag bag that may work better. If it’s just not working in your head, you could try a very flat braid and then stitch it together.

Hi: I have lots of Alpaca Rug yarn made with the fibre from my herd of Alpacas and I would love to make rugs with it. My table-top weaving loom is not working out for this purpose and I would love to learn how to do it by hand. Any suggestions as to how to fasten the braids together??

This is the first time I’ve found instructions for making rag rugs with this method. My greatgrandmother, grandmother, mother, me, and my granddaughters make (and made) rugs like this. I do demonstrations at our local farmers market to pass on the tradition, and I’ve done classes at the local senior center.
This is the first time I’ve found someone who does this method outside of my family. I’m grateful for your excellent instructions. A picture is worth a thousand words.

That was an eye opener, i’ve always wanted to make rugs but always thought they were complicated ! NOT SO ! I’m now off to do someting with all the material i have hoarded for years and did not have a clue how to start it. THANK YOU x

I discovered your blog awhile ago via Frugal Kiwi’s post about rag rugs. I finally had a go at making my own rug a few weeks ago. It worked really well, now I’m hooked. I’ve used up all the old t-shirts in the house and have had to post on free-cycle for more! If anyone is looking for alternative shapes/patterns this technique can also be used to make a circle rug, just start ‘tucking’ straight away rather than working a length first or a rectangular rug, work up and back to step 8, then instead of going around the end turn in the opposite direction and work back down the side of the row you have just done, depending on how you work the turn you can get diagonal stripes or a chevron pattern.

Hello, I love this tutorial as its the only one I could find that truly has no sewing. I would LOVE, LOVE it if you would be able to do a video tutorial, as it would be easier for my mind to see you do it, than just from looking back and forth at the tutorial. =)

How about right now? You can sleep when you’re dead! Get to work!! *whip crack here*.

Oh, okay. Fine. We’ll just muddle along with your tutorial. Thanks for sharing that, btw. No, seriously… I’m grateful. My darling has a huge stack of raggedy t-shirts and is still trying to wear them. I’m trying to convince him that it makes more sense for me to make a rug out of them so I can stand to stand longer in the kitchen and make pies! He’ll do just about anything for a cherry pie! HA!

I absolutely love this tutorial, and can’t wait to try it out! But, I was wondering if it would be able to go through the washing machine. I need a new rug for my kitchen, but that one usually needs to be washed at least once a month (we’re terribly clumsy in the kitchen, lol) and I don’t want to spend all the time making a wonderful rug and then put it through the washing machine and have it fall apart.
Thanks again. 🙂

I don’t know how it would do with regular washing. It would depend on how well you braided it. I would make a small tester to use as a pot holder and run it through the wash a bunch to see what happened.

Can this be done with quilting weight cotton? I notice that my fabric strips don’t roll up like yours and have fraying at the edges which makes for a messy cumbersome weave. Did the fabric you use have stretch in it? Your rug looks great!

i’m looking for help in finding instructions on how to make rag rugs out of t-shirts and a hulahoop… a friend of mine found instructions in a magizine and brought them to work for me. we can’t find them now and i would love to make one. Can anyone help me?

Hello.
Love this tutorial so much that I linked it to an article I wrote on my blog about re-using old clothes. You can find it here http://www.chappellavenue.blogspot.com
Please let me know if you would like me to remove the link.

This is great! I need a rug for my dorm but, being a college student, I’m broke as no other. I was just wondering, How many t shirts did you use for this, two? I want mine to be a decent size so I may be collecting people’s old clothes.

I must move within two weeks and must down-size considerably. I have fabric ready to use for crocheting or braiding rag rugs in bins ready to donate.
I’d like to find a group or just one person who enjoys creating rag rugs to become the joyous recipients of two large plastic bins of ready-to-use fabric for creating rag rugs. (My mom called the result of the fabrics she cut, sewed and rolled up: “carpet balls.”) Remembering how much time, effort and love Mother put into preparing for rug-making, it would be a shame to just threw it all out.
Please let me know if anyone is interested.

I just need to say THANK YOU! I searched all over Pinterest and I kept finding the round rag rug, but I didn’t want that. So I did the Internet search (and have now pinned your site), and found your wonderful tutorial! It was a bit hard to understand just reading, so I jumped into it and figured I’d get it once I was doing it…. And I did! I spent a good deal of this evening working on one for my little one and can’t wait to finish it!

Thanks again!

And if anyone is looking to get rid of t-shirts, feel free to send my way! You can email to [email protected]

Its really a wonderful tuts , that helped with this art.I am always eager to learn something new.Thanks a lott.I have this pile of old clothes stacked nearly 4 ft high and didnt knoe what to do with them.I have sorted the t-shirts and started with this.
thanks a lot once again
keep doing something new..

I would disagree. I don’t find it confusing. It’s quite intuitive once you get started. I like how this rug grows quickly. Good for impatient crafters! I’m a little unsure about how to decrease the strands though, but again, maybe when I get to that stage it might become more obvious. Thanks for this. That’s Christmas sorted, then!

For Julie: I would love to have your extras. I am a disabled stay at home mom and the days sometimes get monotonous. I love this new craft for the rugs and purses especially since Christmas is coming. Thank you & God Bless!

I learned how to make this type of rug from my aunt in Minnesota. She turned 100 years old this spring. She learned from her older sister. My Aunties were the ultimate up-cyclers. During the 30’s, 40’s and 50’s the rugs were made from wool clothing. Then in the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s they made the rugs from polyester clothing. They often gifted a rug as a wedding gift. My cousins and I have long been interested in finding out whether other people made rugs this way. We make the rugs with 8 strands instead of 4. Your instructions are excellent!

Thanks for the tutorial, I went to the link for the other instructions and yours are much more streamlined and clear. Plus, I like your pattern better. I hope to make one soon, can you use any kind of material or is cotton jersey the best for this?
Thanks again, finding project patterns like this are hard to come by, so glad I found it. Take good care of yourself and know that you are appreciated very much!
Creatively Yours!
Jenni

Very neat, I’ll have to *try* to make one myself. Thanks for the tut.
Question, what do you do with the ends when you are tapering off to finish the rug? Don’t they eventually unravel? I guess one can place a few sutures in to hold them. I’d love to see a video, would greatly help! Thanks again

This is awesome!!! Thank-you for taking the time to spread the rag rug love LOL I’m excited to uphold my grandmother’s tradition of making our own rugs . She passed away last year in July and I never had a chance to learn from her how to make them so thank you thank you thank you this is wonderful!!!! now I get to teach my daughter.

You can also just braid a straight line as long as you want. Then start with one end and start winding the braid around the end and back again. Take a needle and thread and place a stitch at each end to hold them together. Continue to wind the braid around the rest of the braid, making stitches to hold to each other. You can make it into any shape depending on that first braid. Tight and small first braid makes a round rug and a long first braid makes a more rectangle rug.

I followed your tutorial as a guideline about a year ago and turned two king-sized bed sheets into durable braided rugs. Last weekend, I decided to turn the two smaller rugs into one larger one. The method I used is based on the on you posted, except I did not add strips as I went around the core braid, nor did I start the rug with two strips tied in a knot in the middle. I love that I could do this anywhere! I linked to this page and to your site from my modest little blog. 🙂 Blessings and best wishes!

Someone showed me how to do this 35 years ago and I forgot the method and the person, so I was delighted to find you on the very first site I opened. I will be making one of these soon. Thank you so much for the clear instructions. Note on washing a heavy rug, I put it on the deck on a warm day, hose it down, spray it with soap of your choice and give it a good sweep on both sides and rinse with with the jet setting on the nozzle. Works well on a jute back carpet that can’t be machine washed. Drape over picnic table or what ever to drip dry.

THANK YOU!! I have been looking for years for directions on this style, not the sewn kind. My grandmother who died in 1979 at 84 years old taught me.. I used to help her all the time, but in the years since she died, I wasn’t able to remember how to start one or turn corners. She used “silk stockings” that had runs, upholstery fabric, anything she could get her hands on. She even used some silk parachute fabric that was discarded after the war. I STILL use many of her original rugs today. I do machine wash them and machine dry them. Some need some repair, but considering they are 40-50 years or older, they are in great shape! I can’t wait to revive her work and carry on the tradition. Thanks God for those who won’t let technology kill our pioneer and creative spirits, but use it to share the traditions!

Hi, I love the rug you made. I am trying to teach myself, so I can teach my 4-H group. I love the idea of using old clothes. I try to teach them to recycle whenever possible. I wondered if there was video of this tutorial? I am having trouble with the turn. Thank you.

Hi, my mom and I have started this project with old sheets and so far it’s turning out great! I had a question though. We are on the third column and there is a noticeable curve in the work. It is almost S- shaped. Is this supposed to happen? There aren’t any full size pictures of how the work looks as it’s being woven and if it’s not supposed to look like that, I’m going to assume it’s a matter of fabric tension. Thanks!

Thank you so much for this tutorial. My hands don’t seem to want to work with more than 4 strands at a time, so I am having to improvise a little. But it’s working beautifully. Using strips of many different t-shirts and not trying to stick to a pattern, it is coming out very colorful and random. And so easy to do while I am on bed rest. Thanks again!

Sarah G, you can totally just continue with 4 strands. I actually braided a large rug using this method using just 4 strands (and white bedsheets, so no pattern). Be wary of buckling, and alternate pulling 2 strands through the same “opening” around the corners to increase the amount of “openings” as the rug gets larger.

I’ve been looking for this no sew method FOREVER! Thank you SO MUCH for this tutorial, it is very clear and easy to understand. Way better explanation than the link that you gave. Thank you once again!

I have a small tip though, attached a small safety pin at the end of each strip. and then tuck through the braid with the safety pin and pull the rest of the strip through. It will make the tucking much more easier. 🙂

I would so love to make one of these, but i was lost almost from the very start. I guess those who are way more craft savvy know exactly what you are talking about thru this tutorial, but i would definitely be one who needs a video tutorial on this. Cute idea tho! My hat is off to you!

Oh Ms. Ivory…..i absolutely love your rug and how very VERY grateful I am to finally find a no-sew (for real) rag rug. I have been searching for a while now. And in the mean time I did however learn to make TARN(T-shirt yarn)…… In fact i have probably made enough Tarn to make about a dozen of these awesome rugs. Hahaha. Thanks again for taking the time to write and post this. Can’t wait to get started!!!!

Thanks for this tut.. Followed your tutorial along with the other tutorial you linked in this post and was able to make my own no-sew rug. My hubby, kids and friends loved it a lot. I made a blog post about it and linked this post. 🙂

I have been looking everywhere for a tutorial on this technique, so thank you for taking the time to write up and photograph the instructions. I have requested several books on rag rugs from my nlibrary, only to find that the instructions are for sewn techniques or weaving on a frame (both lovely but not what I wanted).

Off to my op shop to see if I can get some old sheets. If not I will try fabric remnants. Hmm, I wonder if you could use rope to make a doormat?

Hi!!! I found your blog when I was looking for a tutorial for a rug and I instantly thought I should do it.Now I have done it halfway and it’s coming really nice and everyone in my family like it.Thank you very much for sharing this with us.. 🙂